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Ask HN: How can I get up to speed?

5 points by RyanHolliday 15 years ago · 10 comments · 1 min read


Basically, when I was a teenager I taught myself HTML/CSS, did some low-quality podcasting and blogging with friends, read tech and startup news constantly and did some freelance web design. Then, I went to college across the country, lost touch with my tech friends, studied political science and then business administration, and I've been completely out of the loop letting what limited skills I do have get rusty. So, what is your advice for me (and for anyone else in a similar position, who either has no tech skills or who has rusty, very rudimentary ones) to get up to speed?

Super broad question, so any kind of feedback is welcome. Programming languages to learn, a book to read, a blog I should have in my reader, anything.

davidw 15 years ago

Ruby (on Rails) or Python (Django) would be a good place to dig in, to start doing web stuff. Those languages are also applicable to non-web problems as well.

  • codeslush 15 years ago

    If you're going down the rails path, start with this free and great intro tutorial/book: http://railstutorial.org/chapters/

    • RyanHollidayOP 15 years ago

      Thanks! This looks great, really comprehensive.

      • codeslush 15 years ago

        It should be noted that it not only gets you going with Rails, but also instills some great practices from the beginning - like test driven development. Get started and you'll have your own little twitter deployed in just a couple of days! ;-)

  • rgbrgb 15 years ago

    I agree with this especially if you're trying to get jobs.

    You will inevitably have to learn some javascript at some point though so you might also want to look at node.js (awesome but not as many jobs yet).

  • space-monkey 15 years ago

    Agreed. These are good places to start because you can just start building and learn as you go. Once you start building, you'll figure out what you need to be reading very quickly.

  • RyanHollidayOP 15 years ago

    Of the two, does it matter which one I start with, or are both equally suitable for an absolute beginner?

    • srik1234 15 years ago

      It does not matter. Both are suitable for beginners and have widespread support within the programming community. I can add "php" to the list, which also falls on the same level in terms of resources available on the net.

jpmc 15 years ago

What do you want to do with this knowledge? We could recommend ten types of hammers when what you need is a screwdriver.

  • RyanHollidayOP 15 years ago

    Good point. Initially, what I'm looking to do is to learn enough to put together, at least in a rudimentary fashion, the ideas that I have for apps or startups. Right now I'm one of those people with ideas and no ability to execute, and I realize how pretty much useless that is.

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